The cost of providing physical therapy for patients in intensive care is outweighed by the savings generated by earlier discharges!

@OPCPhysio and Optimal Performance wants the public who use healthcare to be aware that there are increasing studies of the ROI & improved patient health outcomes when Physiotherapists are present to work with patients in both ICU/CCU’s and in the Emergency Rooms of hospitals. Imagine being seen by a PT right away in Emergency to deal with all back injuries, straight forward fractures, ligament and joint injury, basic concusions & MSI”s; can order & read your xrays and refer you ASAP to Orthopod & Hand Specialists when needed; In ICU PT’s help with mobilization and chest therapy. And at less than 25% of current costs. Read more & ask your MP & MPP why this is not taking place in more hospitals in Canada. JE Sleeth Reg PT & owner OPC

BALTIMORE, Jan. 14 (UPI) — The cost of providing physical therapy for patients in intensive care is outweighed by the savings generated by earlier discharges, U.S. researchers say.

Dr. Dale M. Needham, an associate professor of medicine and critical care specialist at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said a major barrier to early rehab programs in the ICU were a concern among hospital administrators because of the cost.

“However, our study shows that a relatively low investment up front can produce a significant overall reduction in the cost of hospital care for these patients,” Needham, the study’s senior author, said in a statement. “Such programs are an example of how we can save money and improve care at the same time.”

The Johns Hopkins ICU admits about 900 patients each year. In 2008, the hospital created an early rehabilitation program with dedicated physical and occupational therapists, which added about $358,000 to the cost of care annually.

However, by 2009, the length of stay in the ICU had decreased an average of 23 percent, down from six-and-a-half days to five days, while the time spent by the same patients as they transitioned to less-intensive hospital units fell 18 percent.

Using this financial model, the study authors estimated a net cost saving for the hospital of about $818,000 per year, even after factoring in the up-front costs, Needham said.

The findings are scheduled to be published in the March issue of Critical Care Medicine.